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Catching Out

Catching Out
The Secret World of Day Laborers  
This edition: Hardcover, 224 pages
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Description

Seasoned journalist and professor Dick Reavis reported to a labor hall each morning, hoping to "catch out," or get job assignments. To supplement his retirement savings, the sixty-two-year-old North Carolinian joined people dispatched by an agency to manual jobs for which they were paid at the end of each day.

Written with the flair of a gifted portraitist and storyteller, Catching Out describes Reavis's jobs at a factory; as a construction and demolition worker, landscaper, road crew flagman, auto-auction driver and warehouseman; and several days spent sorting artifacts in a dead packrat's apartment. On one pick-and-shovel job, he finds that his partner is too blind to see the hole they're digging. In each setting, he describes the personalities and problems of his desperate peers, the attitudes of their bosses, and the straits of immigrant coworkers, so many of whom make up the three-million-strong day-laborer poor.

This is a gritty, hard-times evocation of the often colorful men and women on the bottom rung of the American workforce. It is partly a guide to performing hard, physical tasks, partly a celebration of strength, and partly a venting of ire at stingy and stern overseers. Reavis reminds us that physical exertion, even when painful or unpleasant, remains vital to the economy -- and that those who labor, though poorly paid, bring vigor, skill, and cunning to their tasks.

In the tradition of Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickel and Dimed, Catching Out is destined to become a classic of our troubled times.

"A first-person dispatch from the bottom rung of the American ladder, the world where six bucks an hour is great work if you can get it. Dick Reavis worked side by side with people most of us see right through. Clear-eyed and tough-minded in its portrayal of their fatigue, desperation, and hopelessness, it's also a powerful testament to their dignity, humor, and humanity. Memorable characters, invisible no more."
-- William Broyles, Jr., author of Brothers in Arms: A Journey from War to Peace
"An unsentimental yet humane glimpse of life from under the American economy's floorboards. Immersing himself in the hitherto unexplored world of day laborers, Reavis reminds us of an unglamorous truth -- namely, that our nation's prosperity depends not just on captains of industry but also on the exertions of all-American roustabouts with monikers like Flat Top and Tyke and Real Deal."
-- Robert Draper, author of Dead Certain: The Presidency of George W. Bush
"Dick Reavis crosses the class divide in modern America to join and bear witness to the day laborers who toil along society's margins. Catching Out reminds us of the dignity of manual work, and it also stirs our conscience about how frequently the men and women who do that work are exploited. In his appealingly modest way, Reavis carries on the tradition of John Steinbeck."
-- Samuel Freedman, author of The Inheritance
"Dick Reavis reveals what he learned working among millions of day laborers on the bottom rung of our workforce. With this trenchant report he does what Barbara Ehrenreich did for women in Nickel and Dimed."
-- Mario M. Cuomo
INDY, February 18, 2010
...⇒ Read an excerpt from Reavis' new book, Catching Out: The Secret World of Day Laborers Independent Weekly: How do you think society's views and values have changed regarding blue-collar work? Dick Reavis: I think it's gone ...